Mining and Mineral Resources
Rodger Allen Gold Mine
Nonrenewable Mineral Resources
• Earth crust = Minerals + rock Minerals –inorganic compound that occurs
naturally in the earth’s crust – Solid – Regular internal crystalline structure.
• Rock – solid combination of 1 or more minerals.
• Mineral Resource: Any mineral useful to humans– Metallic Minerals: Iron Oxide, Gold– Non-metallic mineral: Limestone, sand– Fossil Fuel; Coal, Petroleum
• Ore: A rock that can be profitably mined for a mineral (often a metal) or for minerals (metals)– High Grade Ore; has high concentration of the mineral– Low Grade Ore: smaller concentration
• Gangue: Minerals other than ore present in a rock
Conversionto product
Surfacemining
Metal ore Separationof ore fromgangue
Smelting Meltingmetal
Discardingof product
Recycling
Life Cycle of a Metal Resource
Smelting – heating to release metals but creating air polluting by-products
Chemical removal processes such as using cyanide to remove gold can create Toxic holding ponds
Surface Mines• Open pit mines
– Where large 3D ore body lies close to the surface– Leaves a large exposed hole on the surface– Exposed rocks prone to weathering and polluting
• Strip mines– Mostly for coal where minerals occur in layers paralleling
the surface– Waste rocks dumped back as spoil banks– Newer regulations require reclamation involving grading,
restoring, and replanting – Can cause changes in topography and drainage
Extracting Mineral Deposits• Surface mining - shallow deposits in US extracts 90% of non-fuel minerals and rocks and
60% of the coal.– Overburden – soil and rock overlying deposit.– Spoils – discarded overburden
Open-pit Mining Area Strip Mining
Mountaintop Removal
Figure 15-14Figure 15-14
Extracting Mineral Deposits
• Subsurface mining - deposits that are too deep for surface mining
– Disturbs less – produces less waste – but also less effective and dangerous.
Underground Mines• Generally less disruptive than surface mines• Tunnels closely follow the ore body• Some waste rock on the surface• Shallow abandoned mines can cause collapse
Sources of Metal Pollution• Mining
– Air– Water – Land
• Fossil Fuel Combustion– Air– Water– Land
• Other sources• Natural Sources
Harmful Environmental Effects of Mining
• Acid Mine Drainage (AMD)
• Heavy Metal Contamination
• Processing chemical pollution
• Erosion and Sedimentation
99 tons of waste for every ton of Copper
• Acid Mine Drainage (AMD)– Sulfur in ores react with water and oxygen to form
sulfuric acid which leaks out from the mine– Thiobacillus ferroxidans bacteria in acid water
hastens the process– Acid is carried off the mine site by rainwater or
surface drainage and deposited into nearby streams, rivers, lakes and groundwater. AMD severely degrades water quality, and can kill aquatic life and make water virtually unusable.
Acid Mine Drainage
• 2. Heavy Metal Contamination & Leaching– Heavy metal pollution is caused when such metals
as arsenic, cobalt, copper, cadmium, lead, silver and zinc contained in excavated rock or exposed in an underground mine come in contact with water.
– Metals are leached out and carried downstream as water washes over the rock surface.
– leaching is particularly accelerated in the low pH conditions such as are created by Acid Mine Drainage.
• 3. Processing Chemicals Pollution– occurs when chemical agents (such as cyanide or sulphuric
acid used by mining companies to separate the target mineral from the ore) spill, leak, or leach from the mine site into nearby water bodies. These chemicals can be highly toxic to humans and wildlife.
• 4. Erosion and Sedimentation– Mineral development disturbs soil and rock in the course of
constructing and maintaining roads, open pits, and waste impoundments.
– erosion of the exposed earth may carry substantial amounts of sediment into streams, rivers and lakes.
– Excessive sediment can clog riverbeds and smother watershed vegetation, wildlife habitat and aquatic organisms.